Fine animation, but where does it
go?
The Prince of Egypt,
starring the voices of Val Kilmer, Ralph Fiennes and
Patrick Stewart, is directed by Brenda Chapman, Steve
Hickner and Simon Wells. Rated PG for intense depiction
of thematic elements.

By
Peter T. Chattaway ChristianWeek film critic
If you want to make an impression, it
helps to have a prophet on your side. Jeffrey Katzenberg,
the former Disney production chief who co-founded the
DreamWorks studio with Steven Spielberg and David Geffen,
wanted to prove that he could make animated films
surpassing those of Disney in their technical prowess and
artistic ambition. Spielberg suggested that he produce an
animated remake of The Ten Commandments.
Thus was born The Prince of Egypt,
an eye-popping extravaganza and a very impressive film,
indeed. It features probably the best and most seamless
integration of computer-generated images and hand-drawn
animation to date, and it takes mainstream animated films
one small but important step closer to mature
storytelling.
True, the film does rely on the
Broadway-style show tunes that have become de rigeur of
late, but it is free of talking animals and cute
sidekicks. Moreover, the central relationship is not
between two dreamy lovers, but rather between two
brothers torn apart by their respective destinies: Moses
(the voice of Val Kilmer) and Rameses (Ralph Fiennes) are
not jealous rivals for the throne but siblings who
genuinely love each other. The film is at its most
interesting and powerful when it explores their kinship.
Tragic
figure
In fact, Rameses turns out to be the
films most tragic figure. At the beginning, his
place on the throne is already assured, but he feels he
cannot live up to the standards that have been set for
him by his father, the Pharaoh Seti (Patrick Stewart).
Moses, on the other hand, is a wild and reckless fellow
who keeps getting his older brother into trouble.
When Moses learns the truth about his
Hebrew childhood and accidentally kills an Egyptian, he
flees the palace and leaves Rameses behind. When Moses
returns some years later, Rameseswho has succeeded
Seti as Pharaohis happy to see him at first, but he
is bemused and distraught when Moses tells him to let the
Israelites go. Rameses heart is hardened out of his
need to live up to his tyrannical fathers
expectations.
The film is full of clever, fantastic
and dazzling setpieces, including a chaotic chariot race,
a hieroglyphic nightmare sequence, a series of plagues
culminating in the ghost that kills the firstborn, the
parting of the Red Sea, and Moses mystical
encounter with the burning bush, its ectoplasmic flames
quietly transforming into green leaves as God promises to
lead the Israelites to a land of milk and honey.
No
moral vision
But as wonderful as all this activity
is, one cant help thinking there is little at stake
in any of this beyond the activity itself. In a nutshell,
The Prince of Egypt has no moral vision to
communicate under all this sound and fury.
Like most cartoons, it expresses a
universal yearning for freedom, but it doesnt go
beyond that to explore the responsibilities that prevent
such freedom from being abused. The film ends at the Red
Sea; there is no golden calf, no grumbling in the
wilderness, and no giving of the law, apart from a single
wordless shot of Moses carrying two stone tablets.
Say what you want about the tawdriness
of past epics, but they were usually about
something. The 1923 version of The Ten Commandments
critiqued godless modernity and self-righteous
fundamentalism; the 1956 remake positioned the Israelites
at the beginning of a global battle for democracy. TV
movies about Moses produced since then have gone on to
explore some of the more complex dimensions of the Hebrew
faith.
The Prince of Egypt, on the
other hand, promotes a sort of generalized pop
spirituality: hold on, have faith, just believe, no
specifics. Katzenberg and his associates really just want
to put on a show, to build a monument to their talents
that will stand for years to come, like a pyramid or a
sphinx. And, as far as that goes, they have succeeded. At
least their workers get paid.
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